7,051 research outputs found
Map++: A Crowd-sensing System for Automatic Map Semantics Identification
Digital maps have become a part of our daily life with a number of commercial
and free map services. These services have still a huge potential for
enhancement with rich semantic information to support a large class of mapping
applications. In this paper, we present Map++, a system that leverages standard
cell-phone sensors in a crowdsensing approach to automatically enrich digital
maps with different road semantics like tunnels, bumps, bridges, footbridges,
crosswalks, road capacity, among others. Our analysis shows that cell-phones
sensors with humans in vehicles or walking get affected by the different road
features, which can be mined to extend the features of both free and commercial
mapping services. We present the design and implementation of Map++ and
evaluate it in a large city. Our evaluation shows that we can detect the
different semantics accurately with at most 3% false positive rate and 6% false
negative rate for both vehicle and pedestrian-based features. Moreover, we show
that Map++ has a small energy footprint on the cell-phones, highlighting its
promise as a ubiquitous digital maps enriching service.Comment: Published in the Eleventh Annual IEEE International Conference on
Sensing, Communication, and Networking (IEEE SECON 2014
Analysis of Potential Co-Benefits for Bicyclist Crash Imminent Braking Systems
In the US, the number of traffic fatalities has had a long term downward trend as a result of advances in the crash worthiness of vehicles. However, these improvements in crash worthiness do little to protect other vulnerable road users such as pedestrians or bicyclists. Several manufacturers have developed a new generation of crash avoidance systems that attempt to recognize and mitigate imminent crashes with non-motorists. While the focus of these systems has been on pedestrians where they can make meaningful contributions to improved safety [1], recent designs of these systems have recognized mitigating bicyclist crashes as a potential co-benefit. This paper evaluates the performance of one system that is currently available for consumer purchase. Because the vehicle manufacturer does not claim effectiveness for their system under all crash geometries, we focus our attention on the crash scenario that has the highest social cost in the US: the cyclist and vehicle on parallel paths being struck from behind. Our analysis of co benefits examines the ability to reduce three measures: number of crashes, fatalities, and a comprehensive measure for social cost that incorporates morbidity and mortality. Test track simulations under realistic circumstances with a realistic surrogate bicyclist target are conducted. Empirical models are developed for system performance and potential benefits for injury and fatality reduction. These models identify three key variables in the analysis: vehicle speed, cyclist speed and cyclist age as key determinants of potential co-benefits. We find that the evaluated system offers only limited benefits for any but the oldest bicycle riders for our tested scenario
Situational Awareness Enhancement for Connected and Automated Vehicle Systems
Recent developments in the area of Connected and Automated Vehicles (CAVs) have boosted the interest in Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITSs). While ITS is intended to resolve and mitigate serious traffic issues such as passenger and pedestrian fatalities, accidents, and traffic congestion; these goals are only achievable by vehicles that are fully aware of their situation and surroundings in real-time. Therefore, connected and automated vehicle systems heavily rely on communication technologies to create a real-time map of their surrounding environment and extend their range of situational awareness. In this dissertation, we propose novel approaches to enhance situational awareness, its applications, and effective sharing of information among vehicles.;The communication technology for CAVs is known as vehicle-to-everything (V2x) communication, in which vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) have been targeted for the first round of deployment based on dedicated short-range communication (DSRC) devices for vehicles and road-side transportation infrastructures. Wireless communication among these entities creates self-organizing networks, known as Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks (VANETs). Due to the mobile, rapidly changing, and intrinsically error-prone nature of VANETs, traditional network architectures are generally unsatisfactory to address VANETs fundamental performance requirements. Therefore, we first investigate imperfections of the vehicular communication channel and propose a new modeling scheme for large-scale and small-scale components of the communication channel in dense vehicular networks. Subsequently, we introduce an innovative method for a joint modeling of the situational awareness and networking components of CAVs in a single framework. Based on these two models, we propose a novel network-aware broadcast protocol for fast broadcasting of information over multiple hops to extend the range of situational awareness. Afterward, motivated by the most common and injury-prone pedestrian crash scenarios, we extend our work by proposing an end-to-end Vehicle-to-Pedestrian (V2P) framework to provide situational awareness and hazard detection for vulnerable road users. Finally, as humans are the most spontaneous and influential entity for transportation systems, we design a learning-based driver behavior model and integrate it into our situational awareness component. Consequently, higher accuracy of situational awareness and overall system performance are achieved by exchange of more useful information
Visual Clutter Study for Pedestrian Using Large Scale Naturalistic Driving Data
Some of the pedestrian crashes are due to driver’s late or difficult perception of pedestrian’s appearance. Recognition of pedestrians during driving is a complex cognitive activity. Visual clutter analysis can be used to study the factors that affect human visual search efficiency and help design advanced driver assistant system for better decision making and user experience. In this thesis, we propose the pedestrian perception evaluation model which can quantitatively analyze the pedestrian perception difficulty using naturalistic driving data. An efficient detection framework was developed to locate pedestrians within large scale naturalistic driving data. Visual clutter analysis was used to study the factors that may affect the driver’s ability to perceive pedestrian appearance. The candidate factors were explored by the designed exploratory study using naturalistic driving data and a bottom-up image-based pedestrian clutter metric was proposed to quantify the pedestrian perception difficulty in naturalistic driving data. Based on the proposed bottom-up clutter metrics and top-down pedestrian appearance based estimator, a Bayesian probabilistic pedestrian perception evaluation model was further constructed to simulate the pedestrian perception process
YOLO-Drone:Airborne real-time detection of dense small objects from high-altitude perspective
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), specifically drones equipped with remote
sensing object detection technology, have rapidly gained a broad spectrum of
applications and emerged as one of the primary research focuses in the field of
computer vision. Although UAV remote sensing systems have the ability to detect
various objects, small-scale objects can be challenging to detect reliably due
to factors such as object size, image degradation, and real-time limitations.
To tackle these issues, a real-time object detection algorithm (YOLO-Drone) is
proposed and applied to two new UAV platforms as well as a specific light
source (silicon-based golden LED). YOLO-Drone presents several novelties: 1)
including a new backbone Darknet59; 2) a new complex feature aggregation module
MSPP-FPN that incorporated one spatial pyramid pooling and three atrous spatial
pyramid pooling modules; 3) and the use of Generalized Intersection over Union
(GIoU) as the loss function. To evaluate performance, two benchmark datasets,
UAVDT and VisDrone, along with one homemade dataset acquired at night under
silicon-based golden LEDs, are utilized. The experimental results show that, in
both UAVDT and VisDrone, the proposed YOLO-Drone outperforms state-of-the-art
(SOTA) object detection methods by improving the mAP of 10.13% and 8.59%,
respectively. With regards to UAVDT, the YOLO-Drone exhibits both high
real-time inference speed of 53 FPS and a maximum mAP of 34.04%. Notably,
YOLO-Drone achieves high performance under the silicon-based golden LEDs, with
a mAP of up to 87.71%, surpassing the performance of YOLO series under ordinary
light sources. To conclude, the proposed YOLO-Drone is a highly effective
solution for object detection in UAV applications, particularly for night
detection tasks where silicon-based golden light LED technology exhibits
significant superiority
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